Large variations in stock prices happen with sufficient frequency to raise
doubts about existing models, which all fail to account for non-Gaussian
statistics. We construct simple models of a stock market, and argue that the
large variations may be due to a crowd effect, where agents imitate each
other's behavior. The variations over different time scales can be related to
each other in a systematic way, similar to the Levy stable distribution
proposed by Mandelbrot to describe real market indices. In the simplest, least
realistic case, exact results for the statistics of the variations are derived
by mapping onto a model of diffusing and annihilating particles, which has been
solved by quantum field theory methods. When the agents imitate each other and
respond to recent market volatility, different scaling behavior is obtained. In
this case the statistics of price variations is consistent with empirical
observations. The interplay between ``rational'' traders whose behavior is
derived from fundamental analysis of the stock, including dividends, and
``noise traders'', whose behavior is governed solely by studying the market
dynamics, is investigated. When the relative number of rational traders is
small, ``bubbles'' often occur, where the market price moves outside the range
justified by fundamental market analysis. When the number of rational traders
is larger, the market price is generally locked within the price range they
define.Comment: 39 pages (Latex) + 20 Figures and missing Figure 1 (sorry), submitted
to J. Math. Eco